Louis Auslander
Born(1928-07-12)July 12, 1928
DiedFebruary 25, 1997(1997-02-25) (aged 68)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Chicago
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsCUNY Graduate Center
Purdue University
Doctoral advisorShiing-Shen Chern
Doctoral studentsJeffrey Litwin
Bharti Temkin

Louis Auslander (July 12, 1928 – February 25, 1997) was a Jewish American mathematician.[1] He had wide-ranging interests both in pure and applied mathematics and worked on Finsler geometry, geometry of solvmanifolds and nilmanifolds, locally affine spaces, many aspects of harmonic analysis, representation theory of solvable Lie groups, and multidimensional Fourier transforms and the design of signal sets for communications and radar. He is the author of more than one hundred papers and ten books.

Education and career

Auslander received his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1955 under Shiing-Shen Chern. He was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in 1955-57 and again in 1971-72.[2] After holding a variety of faculty positions at US universities, in 1965 Auslander joined the faculty at Graduate Center of the City University of New York and since 1971 he had been a Distinguished Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science there.

Personal life

Louis Auslander was married twice, first for over 25 years to Elinor Newstadt Auslander, with whom he had three children (Nathan, Rose, and Daniel), and later to Fernande Couturier Auslander.[3] His brother Maurice Auslander was also a mathematician.[4]

Selected publications

Articles

  • Auslander, Louis & Kostant, Bertram (1971). "Polarization and unitary representations of solvable Lie groups". Inventiones Mathematicae. 14 (4): 255–354. Bibcode:1971InMat..14..255A. doi:10.1007/bf01389744. S2CID 122009744.
  • Auslander, L.; Tolimieri, R. (1979). "Is computing the finite Fourier transform pure or applied mathematics?". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 1: 847–897. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-1979-14686-x.

Books

  • with L. Markus: Flat Lorentz 3-Manifolds, AMS 1957
  • with Robert MacKenzie: Introduction to differentiable Manifolds, McGraw Hill 1963[5]
  • with Leon W. Green and Frank J. Hahn: Flows on homogeneous spaces, Princeton University Press 1963 (with the assistance of Lawrence Markus and William S. Massey and an appendix by L. Greenberg)[6]
  • with Calvin C. Moore: Unitary representations of solvable Lie groups, AMS 1966
  • Abelian Harmonic Analysis, Theta Functions and Function Algebras on a Nilmanifold, Springer, 1975
  • Lecture Notes on Nil-Theta Functions, CBMS lectures, American Mathematical Society, 1977
  • Minimal flows and their extensions, North-Holland 1988[7]
  • as editor: Signal processing theory, 2 volumes, Springer 1990

References

Sources


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.